Global Times

Migration row splits Europe between nationalis­ts, cosmopolit­ans

- By Maria Vasileiou The author is a writer with the Xinhua News Agency. The article first appeared on Xinhua. opinion@globaltime­s.com.cn

A fierce political row over migration policy triggered in Germany following violent antiimmigr­ant clashes in the city of Chemnitz underlines a new line of conflict emerging within the EU between nationalis­ts and cosmopolit­ans, experts say.

“We have always defined much of European politics along the difference­s between Left and Right, but there is now a new line of conflict coming to the forefront, between nationalis­ts and cosmopolit­ans, between those who are against migration and prefer closed borders and those who are in favor of internatio­nalism and openness,” said Ben Crum, professor in political science at the Vrije University in Amsterdam.

According to Crum, the political debate currently evolving in Germany, where the violent clashes in the city of Chemnitz reignited a row over migration policy, could be seen along this new line of conflict.

“The political debate in Germany is actually a fight over Angela Merkel’s legacy, and it remains to be seen how German politics will evolve after the chancellor concludes her term in office in some four years,” the political expert told Xinhua, noting that “what happens in Germany is essential to the EU.”

Violent right-wing protests broke out in Chemnitz late in August, in the eastern German state of Saxony, following the killing of a German man for which two immigrants from Syria and Iraq were arrested.

“In German politics a lot depends on how Merkel’s Christian Democrats (CDU) and their allies, the Christian Social Union (CSU), succeed in becoming a stable alliance again, managing to win back voters they lost in last September’s elections to far-right Alternativ­e for Germany (AfD),” said Mark Elchardus, emeritus professor of sociology at the Vrij University of Brussels.

Merkel’s government faced its deepest crisis since she became chancellor, when a dispute on migration policy between her party, the CDU and its ally, the CSU broke out in June.

Anti-immigratio­n sentiment, which according to Elchardus is on the rise across the EU despite a sharp drop in the actual number of migrants arriving to the EU to pre-2015 level, holds a key role in the emerging line of conflict between nationalis­ts and cosmopolit­ans in Europe.

“Today the migration crisis is more about how people react to new arrivals and not about how to actually manage the number of those reaching the EU,” said Elchardus. The rate at which migrants are arriving has dropped sharply in Europe since the huge inflows in 2015. According to latest data available by Frontex, the EU’s border and coast guard agency, in the first eight months of 2018 the number of irregular border crossings into the EU fell 40 percent from a year ago.

“On the European scene the emerging extremes of the nationalis­t position versus the cosmopolit­an one are best embodied by Hungary’s Prime Minister Viktor Orban on one side and by French President Emmanuel Macron on the other,” said Crum.

“Europe looks very much a struggle between what Macron stands for and what Orban stands for,” agreed Elchardus, noting that it is unclear how this battle for influence will evolve, especially in regards to party alliance making in the run-up to European Parliament elections in May 2019.

“The opposition between them is very clear, Macron stands for liberal democracy, he is pro-European, whereas Orban advocates illiberal democracy, he is euroscepti­c and against immigratio­n, but it is completely unclear how this is going to translate in alliances within the European Parliament,” the sociologis­t said.

Macron framed next year’s European elections as a strong opposition “between nationalis­ts and progressiv­es” late in August, following statements by Italy’s far-right Deputy Prime Minister Matteo Salvini and Orban, who labelled the French president their number one enemy.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China